Journal of applied physiology
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We investigated the effects of lung inflation during continuous positive airway pressure breathing (CPAP) on airway defensive reflexes in 10 enflurane-anesthetized spontaneously breathing humans. The airway defensive reflexes were induced by instillation into the trachea of 0.5 ml of distilled water at two different levels of end-expiratory pressure (0 and 10 cmH2O CPAP). ⋯ Lung inflation during CPAP of 10 cmH2O did not exert any influence on these reflex responses in terms of the types, latencies, and durations of reflex responses although the intensity of the expiration reflex and cough reflex was augmented by lung inflation. Our results suggest that the pulmonary stretch receptors do not play an important role in the mechanisms of airway defensive reflexes in humans.